Congress aofltf be legislature, and, in al) probability 'have carried our candidate for governor. In view of these results, can there he a doubt tliat 4fce ete of Pennsylvania and Ohio will be gkenta the democratic can ' tiidatesin November? We ihitfkttot. Every Vote which was cast for Longstreth in Pennsylvania may -be relied on for Cass and Butler; as may also "every vote giv en to the gallant Waller inUhio. But cm m1 tha faction! that voted fur tha whiir candidates fn those stales be depended upon for Gen. Taylor? If there is any honesty in human nature, they cannot be In the first place, the abolitionists cannot vote lor Gen! Taylor The attraction T tf the vote of that party from the whiy can T ididate will reduce bis vote at least 8.000 in Ohio, and 4,000 iu Pennsylvania. The .abstraction also of the pretended "ire :toil" faction will take from him many r thousand mora in both States. Neither abolitionists nor Van Buren men can vote for the whig nominee., without proving themse...

rCcsacratle Bttllw.rV . TCsfe wm &amp;amp; meetiagf the ftt ffitfCouri House, in ftiVplade.laat eve. BlD5f.l? to 6-feecb froth the Ron. eicnal district in this State. -Tbe mettio wai organized bj Select, fcj p.tJurtta, Esij., chairman; and James CiWaite, secretary. Mr. McCIernand Wintrbduced to the meeting bj Hon. wont' . and delivered one of the labit eloquent and argumentative speechtre have heard dnriog the contest. He CToa br!lef history of the prosperity of ut country under (he influence of demo. measures; and held up in true col1 'era the infamous designs of whiggery iu 'the present canvass. No candid man ouJd hare listened to his speech without being convinced that the safety of the Hepublio : ' demand the election of Lewis ;2as. Mr. AlcClernad is an able and actire champion of democratic principles. "J. 1 Voice from Andrew Jackson. . f How ania attng to the bosom of every freeman, while such a contest as the one sow enacting before u? is raging through the continent, to ...

- Froci Europe The Brittannia arrived et Boston on th10th. Tcfdltaing is a synopsis of Jher ntws; - Southern Italian affairs, are not pacific 'ibe King r Maples reud to acknowledge ihe -French and English mediation, -and threatens the immediate resumption of hostilities. ' - In Germany the southern province again revolted, out were suppressed. 'Prussia escaped revolution br a submis sion of the -King to the wishes ofths Nattonai assembly. In Austria anarchy reigns complete. -Fin Vienna was exhibited the spectacle of a re-aetiooary court, waiting concentre lion. A military force arrived at the capUal to carry out the retragade .policy -and views of a triurrmhant National Asserably. The Cabinet has sent 'a comtnissioner to stop further -progress of the tan of Crotia, who - seems unwilling to "act a fhe tool -of government, and threattens to set up on his own account. Fhanci. On Saturday there was a -scene of unparalleled confusion in the Chamber of Deputies. A member hav ing commented...

$3? Bullying a Witness. , There) U ad attorney practising in our court who has attained a great notoriety far bullying witnee on. tba opposing idea of eases when ha is concerned. As itould not ba polite to give his full name right out to tba ciowd, wo ', will merely call hira ' Wyke." for short. - There) was a horse case, a vary common case' upon our magistrate dockets, trying before Sqire Snellbaker one day ia whiab Vyke happened to be "fernensl" the horse. A slow and easy witness, had been- called to the stand by the pJantiff, Who in a plain straight forward manner, made. the other sido ef the case look rather blue. The plaintifi's attorney being through, , Wyke commenced a regular cro-examinaiion which was cut short in the following manner : , ; W1I, what do you konw about a herse --iyou a horse doctor?" said the barbarian ki ;i P?cu iar couieraptous and ovr bearing manner.. -No, I don't pretend to be a horse doctor, but 1 know a good deal about the nater ot tbe beaiL"' "That, mo...

'A Toothing -Ditty.',; : When Seth gJtfbome from mackerling, Ho sought his Sarah Ann .And found that she, the heartless thing, Had found another man. v.- . - . And then most awful tight he gdt, . Jlbd then he went away, ' ' And bound himselfto go and cut, Lire oak' in Florida. ' He pined upon the .live oalc lands, He murmured in the glades, Jill axo.grew heavy in his hands, All in tho wild wood shades. : lusquetoes bit him every where, No comfort did he get, , -And ah! how terriblj he'd say bad words Whenever he got bit. At last despairing .of .telease, And wishing himselF dead, iH went into the woods a piece, .And chopped off his own head. , labor. "What a debt oT gratitude unpaid, and and I fear, too often unthought . of, does itbe hand writing on the wall mat k up against it at the very mention of the woid. Labor! What has it not effected, what M it not constantly effecting for u ? La.bor ploughs and digs and tills and culii -vates the ground, and sows and reaps and gathers into ...

Drain obodt 'the Cholera. 'It has been frequently remit ked, says the New York Express, that during the chimin Near York in 1632, them was no electricity in -tW aUnopheie; bur a' correspondent of the Oocmal of Com ; imarAu' cot. .a W w m. fg 1 inrliiK.f I ry ot tnis, aud i&amp;amp;at tu thunder -storms were active here during that period. A writer in Chambers' Kdinburg Jour Ural maintains that electrical charges are the true causes of such migratory -tbseas-es at cholera and plague; and. indeed, -ot aUep'Wleiurc. The true remedy, there fore, i the purification i the atnmpheie and the chief object to affe-t this is L'hJo Tint Gas, which is an ingredient in com non salt. Whole street and towns can . be fumigated with chloruie gas as easily .as a single dwelling. In 1832 the town of Dumfrcne, in Scot land, was affected with cholera from the ,3d of September until the 23d of October. At that date every street, lane, and alley vwas fumigated with chlori te gas. Withw.iivp days the pe...